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Dennis T.'s avatar

In 2003 an RE investment property came my way, after renovations it would become a crown jewel if only I could find the money to purchase and renovate. Hard money lender was my only hope. 18% interest to purchase and renovate with money dolled out in exacting amounts as work progressed. 8 month's and the lender wanted 100% repayment. Those were the days of serious money, I got it done in 6 months refinanced the property and pocketed $10k while signing onto a 5 year adjustable mortgage at 7 3/4 percent. Over the following years the rate continued to drop allowing a refinance at 5% fixed 15 year term with a 5 year prepayment penalty with a private investor. The interest rate dropped again, the same private lender wanting to keep the note offered to accept 4.25%, and on and on it went until a Hedge fund knocked on my door wanting to buy all 7-3 unit buildings I had accrued. It was a no brainer. After the ink was dry and the money was in my account I asked: "At the purchase price and knowing my rents are the highest in the area, how are you going to turn a profit?" Dennis, we bought 340 units now 361 units, in 15 years they will be free and clear, cash flows will be in the millions. Hmmm... remind me the name of your firm again? I want to make sure I never make the mistake of investing there.

Those units are worth less today than when I sold them in 2016, the rents have not increased enough to cover the thousands of dollars in new Philadelphia regulations and tax increases and they never will. When I sold the units it took 2.5 months to evict a tenant, if they didn't appeal (rare when they do) today it takes 5 months to evict. The taxes have tripled, and now trash is $300 a year per property where before trash was included in the taxes.

Send more hedge fund investors!

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Frank Westmoreland's avatar

Several pension funds invested in Silicon Valley Bank shares, especially one in Sweden at 4.45%. Wow. Almost all invested tiny amounts, thank goodness. I assume U.S. pension fund investments are spread very wide across many financial institutions to reduce risk. At least I hope so.

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Dow Hurst's avatar

If central banks are buying gold, doesn't that mean that we should be selling it? Don't central banks purchase gold high and sell it low? Typical behavior of government, IIRC.

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Robert Overall's avatar

I thought this article was helpful on the crisis at First Republic Bank.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/first-republic-hit-by-svb-failure-7431495e

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David Embry's avatar

Dominoes teetering, black swans flocking and Sir Bonner struggling to develop positive attitude. And an asteroid on the way. What We Worry Comrades…..

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Mar 11, 2023
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Tom's avatar

Agreed. Also, all these Banks will get bail outs so no worries about risks. Also, don't forget, their assets are not marked-to-market but don't matter as the bail outs will pay full par. I will buy these bank stocks (SI and SVB) at one dollar per share and not a cent more!

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